Part, Chapter
1 I,I | years to those who came to buy it. If the~State demands
2 I,I | Funds are at sixty-two: buy into the Funds. You will
3 I,I | to make enough~money to buy Les Tresorieres,' wouldn'
4 I,I | business will allow us~to buy Les Tresorieres. There in
5 I,I | of his clients. We are to buy property near the~Madeleine,
6 I,I | here, and it was~not to buy perfumery."~ ~"Well, my
7 I,I | steal from others when you buy their stocks at seventy-five.~
8 I,I | stocks at seventy-five.~We buy the ground to-day at to-day'
9 I,II | enough to enable him to buy and cultivate Les Tresorieres,
10 I,II | furiously into the shop to buy six linen shirts,~disputing
11 I,II | thirty per cent if they would buy~the two articles by the
12 I,II | Cesar was then able to buy the huts and the land in
13 I,III| the lands at auction and buy~them in at half their value
14 I,V | and Leander, ah! I shall buy~it, for that flask of oil
15 I,V | the hair; but the Malays buy it up for its~weight in
16 I,I | in it; I~should have to buy it over again; consequently,
17 I,III| returned Cesar. "Why don't you buy your~perfumery from me?"~ ~"
18 I,IV | husband, "Are you~going to buy perfumery?" The baron shrugged
19 I,IV | de Nucingen, so you can buy~chewels and oder tings to
20 I,IV | Monsieur gave orders to buy into the~Funds to the amount
21 I,IV | clap-trap of commerce. We buy up men of~arts and sciences;
22 I,V | when she marries she may buy some trifle to remind her
23 I,VI | look into the failure, and buy up their claims at~half
24 I,VII| eye. "I helped Celestin to buy your~business; but I did
25 I,VII| the evening here. I will buy out Monsieur Cesar's share
26 I,VII| full."~ ~"Then he would buy his wife," said Birotteau.~ ~"
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